Sunday, July 15, 2012

Hollywood Spy wrote about this project before, but it is such a magnificent treat that I just had to make a spotlight for it: BBC's THE HOLLOW CROWN

series which just started airing over in UK with the premiere of the first film in the saga - RICHARD II followed by other three filmed adaptations of Shakespeare's History Plays - HENRY IV parts 1 and 2, and HENRY V. Starting in the year 1399, this continuous story of monarchy follows events during sixteen years of dynastic and political power play. Kings, with their families and followers, are threatened by rebellion and conflict. The story takes us from the Royal Court at Westminster to battlefields in England and France. These rich films are woven with the finest of Shakespeare's poetry and are filmed in the architecture and landscape of the period.

RICHARD II

The first part of THE HOLLOW CROWN saga has been aired recently in UK and should hit USA TV later on this year. In the story King Richard (Ben Whishaw) is called upon to settle a dispute between his cousin Henry Bolingbroke (Rory Kinnear) and Thomas Mowbray (James Purefoy). Richard calls for a duel but then halts it just before swords clash. Both men are banished from the realm. Richard visits John of Gaunt (Patrick Stewart), Bolingbroke's father, who, in the throes of death, reprimands the king.

After seizing Gaunt's money and land, Richard leaves for wars against the rebels in Ireland. Bolingbroke returns to claim back his inheritance. Supported by his allies, Northumberland (David Morrissey) and the

Duke of York (David Suchet), Bolingbroke takes Richard prisoner and lays claim to the throne. The cast also includes Clemency Poesy as Queen Isabella and GAME OF THRONES' Harry Lloyd.

HENRY IV

The second part of the saga was aired last weekend in UK following the heir to the throne, Prince Hal (Tom Hiddleston), who defies his father, King Henry (Jeremy Irons), by spending his time at Mistress

Quickly's (Julie Walters) tavern in the company of the dissolute Falstaff and his companions. The King is threatened by a rebellion led by Hal's rival, Hotspur, his father Northumberland and his uncle

Worcester. In the face of this danger to the state, Prince Hal joins his father to defeat the rebels at the Battle of Shrewsbury and kill Hotspur in single combat.

HENRY IV PART TWO

Aired last night at BBC, the story of the third part of the saga was set in the aftermath of the Battle of Shrewsbury, where Northumberland learns of the death of his son. The Lord Chief Justice attempts on behalf

of the increasingly frail King to separate Falstaff from Prince Hal. The rebels continue to plot insurrection. Falstaff is sent to recruit soldiers and takes his leave of his mistress, Doll Tearsheet. The rebel forces are

overcome. This brings comfort to the dying king, who is finally reconciled to his son. Falstaff rushes to Hal's coronation with expectations of high office!

HENRY V

The final part of the saga will be aired on BBC next weekend and will see the conclusion to the story seen in the previous two films on Henry

IV. After being crowned the new king Henry V (always deeply magnificent Tom Hiddleston) takes England to war and the English confront French in the famous epic battle at Agincourt against the French King (Lamber Wilson).

HOLLOW CROWN TIDBITS

This is BBC's most ambitious and most lavish production on Shakespeare in more than twenty years and is overseen by James Bond director Oscar winning Sam Mendes. You can read more about all of

these film over at BBC official site! HENRY IV was directed by famous Richard Eyre! It is interesting that the production teams of all of these films
include people who worked on classics such as THE PIANO,

THE KING'S
SPEECH,CRANFORD, DOWTON ABBEY, THE QUEEN... The whole project is done to mark
London 2012 Festival and The Cultural Olympiad on the BBC which
coincides with the summer Olympics.

Those all look fantastic and I can't wait to devour them. You know I just saw Richard III on stage and loved it, but Henry V is also one of my all time favorites. I'm so happy they made these movies, and with such great actors too. Brilliant post my dear. :))

This is going to be fantastic. And you know I don't have telly, but I'm betting somewhere on YouTube, the Irish underground is busy thwarting the BBC. The time will be short, the window will be narrow, but I'll find it and be there ready to illegally download it. Wooohoooo!!!

I know you don't approve of this behavior darling and I understand why. I would watch it at a neighbors house if a neighbor would welcome me into their home. But they will not. The Irish diaspora is much, much larger than the Jewish diaspora. We view what we do as an act of solidarity and as a small way of "getting back a little of our own" against the nation that murdered our people and stole our land. And they still hold six of our counties today. Our resources are being bled to pay for social welfare for British people in England while our own people go hungry. Our small act of defiance costs the BBC a couple of thousand pounds a year. Millions of pounds are stolen from Ireland every year and that will never, ever, ever change.

I know that I am on the wrong side of things here, but I get a bit of a rush when we thwart them in some small way.